Italy Around 1600—Secular Edition

Program: #16-49   Air Date: Nov 28, 2016

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The secular side of the early Baroque with music from Cremona, consort works by Carlo Farina, and the early songs about Orpheus that were so inspirational in the creation of the art form of the opera.

I. Sulla Lira: The Voice of Orpheus (Le Miroir de Musique Ensemble). Ricercar CD RIC 354.

Sulla Lira: The Voice of Orpheus

Among the different practices of the Renaissance, the act of singing to the accompaniment of the lyre held a special symbolic role, linked to the myth of Orpheus and to the divine figure of Apollo. With its origins in the mid-15th century, this recitation of epic and lyrical texts initially took the form of monophonic music accompanied by the lira da braccio. With the invention of the lirone in the years around 1500, the role of the accompaniment develops into the recitative style of the 1600s which led to the development of the earliest operas.

Le Miroir de Musique is an ensemble specialised in the music of the late middle ages and Renaissance, from the golden age of the troubadours to the humanist movements of the 16th century. The ensemble is based in Basel (CH) and brings together the most prolific of early music performers, many of whom are graduates of the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis. The image of a «Mirror of Music» is borrowed from Jacques de Liège’s treatise (Speculum Musicae), and reflects our goal of painting a vivid picture of medieval and Renaissance music, in a spirit of fidelity to the original sources.

This project was first conceived for the Festtage Alter Musik in Basel in 2013, at the suggestion of Peter Reidemeister. The programme was developed in close collaboration between the five musicians and the musicologist Martin Kirnbauer.

From MusicWeb.com:

What do you do when you bring a product to market and want to boost its sales? You tell the potential customers that it is something entirely new, revolutionary even. That is exactly what Giulio Caccini did when he published his collection Le nuove musiche in 1601. The title was pretentious: it was not so much an indication that these compositions were newly-written, but rather that they were composed in an entirely new style and were to be performed in a completely new way. The title was pretentious and so was the composer. One year earlier he was in a hurry to publish his opera Euridice, before his colleague and rival Jacopo Peri whose work with the same title was founded on largely the same principles.

Caccini was not the first to ask for a declamatory way of performing: in 1600 Emilio de' Cavalieri had published his sacred drama Rappresentatione di anima e di corpo which, according to the title page, was for recitar cantando - exactly the term Caccini used. Caccini was also not the first to write music for solo voice: Cavalieri's piece largely comprised a series of dialogues between various characters in the form of recitatives, but we can go even further back into history. The Italian humanist and poet Angelo Poliziano (1454-1494) wrote Fabula di Orpheo for the carnival season of 1480 in Mantua. The music is lost, but it is known that it was performed half-spoken, half-sung. One scene is provided with the instruction: "Orpheus sings on a hill with his lyre the following Latin verses". This very much points in the direction of what was to become the standard in the early 17th century and is most famously exposed in Monteverdi's opera L'Orfeo. We also know Poliziano's description of the style of singing which was practiced by the first performer of the role of Orpheus, and that is strikingly identical to the way recitar cantando was defined in Monteverdi's time.

Orpheus is also mentioned in the title of this disc, and for good reason. He was the personification of the singer. According to mythology his father Apollo gave his lyre to Orpheus "who thus was to become the greatest of all singers, with the ability to enchant the natural world, both animate and inanimate (...)", as Martin Kirnbauer writes in his liner-notes. It is not surprising that the story of Orpheus and Euridice was the subject of the two operas which are considered the very first in history: the two Euridices by Peri and Caccini, and of Monteverdi's L'Orfeo.

Orpheus became inextricably linked with the lyre. A festival description of 1529 refers to the entrance of a musician "con una Lira cantando al modo d'Orpheo divinamente" - singing in a divine fashion, in the style of Orpheus, whilst accompanying himself on a lyre. Exactly what kind of instrument was the lyre? A woodcut from a printed edition of the Fabula di Orpheo shows that it was identified with what is known today as the lira da braccio, a bowed instrument played on the arm. "In analogy with the ancient lyre, it has seven strings, two of which lie next to the neck and can only be played as a drone. A flat bridge enables chords to be played, making the instrument ideal for the accompaniment of a single vocal part, or recitation (...)". This instrument became very popular among the educated classes and was not only used to accompany a voice but also for instrumental pieces. As it was often played extempore, little music specifically written for the lira da braccio has been preserved.

However, it had some limitations, and in the early 16th century a new form of lyra was developed: the instrument known as the lira da gamba or lirone, which was held between the legs. Its tuning allowed for a variety of chords with pure thirds and it was possible to play music written for a vocal ensemble with varying voice ranges. It is this feature which made it an ideal vehicle for the basso continuo practice which came into existence at the end of the 16th century.

The programme of this disc illustrates the combination of a solo voice, singing in a mixture of speech and song, and a string instrument. It opens with an anonymous song on a text from Poliziano's Fabula di Orpheo. The third item, Dunque piangiamo, is again on a text from this piece. In this part of the programme we also find some frottole. The frottola was a popular form of secular song in Italy in the 15th century. Originally polyphonic it led to a form of improvised recitation of a text to a musical accompaniment. The pieces performed here are the written-out versions of what might originally have been improvised. Another popular form of vocal music, but then religious, was the lauda. Laude were originally performed in religious fraternities but found wide dissemination and were sung in many cities in northern Italy by singers who accompanied themselves on the lira da braccio or were accompanied by a group of players of various instruments.

An example of a piece specifically intended to be sung by a singer to the accompaniment of a lyre, is Tu ch'ai le corna riguardanti al cielo from Il Sacrificio, a favola pastorale by the pastoral poet Agostino Beccari (c1510-c1590). It is performed here in the setting by Alfonso della Viola, who was in the service of the Este family in Ferrara for forty years. The next piece, O begli anni de l'oro, is very different: the composer, Francesco Corteccia, wanted the player of the lirone to play all the parts while singing the upper part. The ensuing items show the further development of the art of recitar cantando until the composer who claimed to be the inventor of this style, Giulio Caccini. The last piece is particularly interesting. Here we go back in time to Jacques Arcadelt, the Flemish composer who has become especially famous for his madrigals. Laissés la verde couleur is a lamentation by Venus on the death of Adonis. The author of the text indicated that it was "pour dire au luth" - to be spoken to the lute. Arcadelt's setting imitates a French style of ornamentation. "Seen from this angle, "pour dire au luth" is nothing more than a translation of "sulla lira", Martin Kirnbauer concludes in his liner-notes.

In August 2013 I reviewed the first disc by this ensemble - The Birth of the Violin - and nominated it as a Recording of the Month. I am going to do the same with this second disc. It is again a model of intelligent programming, exploring a field in the early music landscape which is otherwise hardly known. Some of the pieces have probably been recorded before but most of them I was hearing for the first time. It is not only the music itself which makes this disc a winner but also the historical context. This is a lesson in music history the like of which one doesn't hear that often. The liner-notes are very helpful in gaining an understanding of what this repertoire is about. The performances are as good as one would wish. María-Cristina Kiehr is a seasoned interpreter of this kind of music, and she proves again how well she is at home in the music of the 16th and 17th centuries. O stella matutina by Dammonis is a good example of her art. Giovanni Cantarini is a new name to me. I have greatly enjoyed his performances - Razzi's O Giesù dolce is particularly beautiful - and hope to hear more from him. The playing of the various instruments - the lirone and the lira da braccio in particular - is first-class and considerably contributes to the impact of this disc.

The combination of repertoire, performance and high production standards - which include texts and translations - makes this a disc not to be missed.

Johan van Veen

anon
Udite, selve, mie dolce parole [6:26]
Alessandro DEMOFONTE (?-?)
Vidi, hor cogliendo rose [4:21]
anon
Dunque, piangiamo, o sconsolata lira [5:15]
Bartolomeo TROMBONCINO (1470-1535)
Cresce la pena mia [3:22]
anon
Romanesca & Passamezzo de lira [3:04]
Serafino RAZZI (1531-1611)
O Giesù dolce [4:52]
Innocentius DAMMONIS (?-1531)
O stella matutina [3:40]
Pianzetti, christiani [2:04]
Giacomo FOGLIANO (1468-1548)
Vengo a te, madre Maria [4:23]
Alfonso DELLA VIOLA (c1508-c1574)
Tu ch'ai le corna riguardanti al cielo [3:08]
Francesco CORTECCIA (1502-1571)
O begli anni de l'oro [5:00]
Sigismondo D'INDIA (c1582-1629)
Com'è soave cosa [2:05]
Claudio SARACINI (1586-1630)
Udite, o ninfe [1:05]
Alessandro STRIGGIO (c1536-1592)
Madonna, il vostro petto [2:58]
Sigismondo D'INDIA
Occhi convien morire [2:38]
Giulio CACCINI (1551-1618)
Funeste piaggie [6:03]
Jacques ARCADELT (1507-1568)
Laissés la verde couleur [4:38]

II. Carlo Farina—Consort Music 1627 (Accademia del Ricercare/Pietro Busca) CPO CD 555 034-2.

Carlo Farina: Consort Music 1627


Some musicologists simply continue to regard Carlo Farina as music history’s first composer of program music because of the Capriccio stravagante, his most famous work. However, the great expressive variety and the sumptuous, finely constructed textures of other works enlarge our picture of this composer, who was much more multifaceted than the (certainly very remarkable) Capriccio stravagante might lead us to believe. Here we need only consider the boldness with which Farina endeavored to employ all the technical and expressive resources of the violin, which made him one of the most important and enduring models for the leading representatives of the German school from Johannes Schop to Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber and Johann Jakob Walther. Our second CD featuring the Accademia Ricercare ensemble presents three-part and four-part dances (pavans, galliards, branles, courantes, balletti, and mascherate) as well as ten two-part and three-part sonatas with titles. While these sonatas were clearly composed for stringed instruments, the dances offer many performance possibilities for consorts consisting of gambas, wind-cap reed instruments, and recorders like the ones very similarly enjoying great popularity in Elizabethan England. A comparative look at Farina’s dances demonstrates that Farina took a decisive step toward modernity in his ten sonatas – as we see in their fuller formal elaboration and more abstract character expressly intended for listening.-

Brando à 4 -
Pavana Seconda -
Galliarda Sesta – Settima – Sesta -
Corrente Seconda, Quarta, Seconda -
Volta Prima à 4 -
Aria Franzesa Seconda -
Mascherada à 4 -
Sonata Prima “La Greca” -
Pavana Seconda à 4 -
Galliarda Tertia à 4 -
Pavana Tertia à 4 -
Galliarda Prima, Tertia, Sesta -
Balletto Allemanno -
Bourrée I – Bourrée II -
Volta Prima à 4

III. Flos Campi (La Rossignol Ensemble). III Milennio CD CDA 0292.

Cremona was always a host to great composers and cultural activity. It acted as a hub and many fruitful professional relationships were formed. This album presents a musical journey through Cremona as well as other cultural hubs Mantua, Ferrara and Florence, where fundamental aspects of madrigal and opera were developed. All of the works on this release, from composers such as Claudio Monteverdi and Florentio Maschera, are performed on period instruments by renowned ensemble La Rossignol.

Canzon VII "La mazzuola"
Fiamme che da begli occhi
Son pur quei tuoi bei lumi
Canzon "La marcha"
Come fenice che rinnova al fuoco
Mentre da te mi parto
Sentirete una canzonetta
Ohimè crudele amore
La golferamma
Folle e ben chi si crede
Sonata "La sfondrata"
Pur ti miro pur ti godo
Chi vuol veder
Fugge, fugge anima mea
Ego flos campi
Canzon seconda
Vola vola pensier

» Galliarda prima - Tertia - Sesta
» Galliarda sesta - Settima - Sesta
» Galliarda tertia a 4
» Mascherada a 4
» Pavana seconda
» Pavana seconda a 4
» Pavana tertia a 4
» Sonata prima (La greca)
» Volta prima a 4
Volta prima a 4 (1628) - See more at: http://www.europadisc.co.uk/classical/127850/Carlo_Farina_-_Consort_Music_1627.htm#sthash.iwHPO7tm.dpuf
- Brando à 4 - Pavana Seconda - Galliarda Sesta – Settima – Sesta - Corrente Seconda, Quarta, Seconda - Volta Prima à 4 - Aria Franzesa Seconda - Mascherada à 4 - Sonata Prima “La Greca” - Pavana Seconda à 4 - Galliarda Tertia à 4 - Pavana Tertia à 4 - Galliarda Prima, Tertia, Sesta - Balletto Allemanno - Bourrée I – Bourrée II - Volta Prima à 4 (1628) - See more at: http://www.soundandmusic.com/carlo-farina-ca-1600-1639-farina-consort-music-dresda-1627-A-28634.html#sthash.wmXREWTY.dpuf
Many musicologists regard carlo Farina as music history's first composer of program music because of his most famous work, Capriccio Stravagante. Carlo Farina: Consort Music 1627 buy CD music However, his great expressive variety of other works enlarge our modern picture of the composer. Carlo Farina: Consort Music 1627 songs We now need to consider the boldness with which Farina endeavored to employ all technical and expressive resources of the violin, which made hime one of the most important and enduring models for the leading representatives of the German school, from Johannes Schop to Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber. A close look at Farina's dances demonstrates that he took a decisive step toward modernity in his ten sonatas - as we see in their fuller formal elaboration on this release terzo libro delle pavane, gagliarde, brand: mascherata, arie franzese, volte, corrente, sinfonie (1627)
» Aria franzesa seconda
» Balletto allemanno
» Bourree I-II
» Brandi a 4
» Corrente seconda - Quarta - Seconda
» Galliarda prima - Tertia - Sesta
» Galliarda sesta - Settima - Sesta
» Galliarda tertia a 4
» Mascherada a 4
» Pavana seconda
» Pavana seconda a 4
» Pavana tertia a 4
» Sonata prima (La greca)
» Volta prima a 4
Volta prima a 4 (1628) - See more at: http://www.europadisc.co.uk/classical/127850/Carlo_Farina_-_Consort_Music_1627.htm#sthash.iwHPO7tm.dpuf

 

Composer Info

Francesco Corteccia (1502-1571) , Alessandro DEMOFONTE, Bartolomeo TROMBONCINO (1470-1535), Serafino RAZZI (1531-1611), Innocentius DAMMONIS (?-1531), Giacomo FOGLIANO (1468-1548), Alfonso DELLA VIOLA (c1508-c1574), Sigismondo D'INDIA (c1582-1629), Claudio SARACINI (1586-1630),Alessandro STRIGGIO (c1536-1592), Giulio CACCINI (1551-1618), Jacques ARCADELT (1507-1568), Carlo Farina, Claudio Monteverdi, Florentio Maschera

CD Info

CD RIC 354, CPO CD 555 034-2, CD CDA 0292